I'm not like you or Tiffany but I live in the west (uk) and I've never heard of the rising flag being bad until Tiffany's scandal. Ask the years growing up I always saw that design used a pattern for various reasons. Video games had it, clothes had it, hell anything related to Japan had it including my school text books. Never knew anything was ever wrong with it. Hell I was barely
That's why I always felt that treating another culture of knowing exactly what's wrong with something is a bit unfair. I mean westerners associate the swastika as bad due to Nazi but I'm willing to bet a lot of them don't realise it's been used by other cultures/religions before Nazis even existed. I have Hindu friends who have used as a symbol to mean I think good luck were criticised for it by others (including me towards them before they explained it to me lol).
But sometimes you get things like even if you explain shit or its common knowledge and they still do the offensive/idiotic thing then that's a whole nother matter like what Sowon seemingly did in reposting it, or for a wider example the continued Confederate and Nazi stuff in America these days
I think what happened is really horrible but I also think this is a quite good explanation...
In an ideal world everyone should know about all major horrible events around the world but THEY don’t. For logical reasons most know about stuff that are geographical and time wise CLOSE to themselves.
People in West don’t know the rising sun (just look at this forum), and to people in East Asia the swastiska is a symbol of the sun or luck, you’ll see a lot of older people in Korea wear it.
There are aweful stuff going on constantly. Does Americans know that the Korean War they participated in is the bloodies in history based on civilian death. Do Scandinavian people know that the many Kurds that live in their country currently are being subjected to genocide. How many know exactly what the Rwanda massacre or Bokoharam is really about and how colonization contributed etc etc
We should acknowledge ALL these events but in reality knowledge is usually skewed to closeness in time, geography or possible social relations